Your smart home gadgets are tattling to your insurance company. Here’s how to shut them up

February 17, 2026

By Kim Komando

Your insurance agent offers you a “smart home discount.” Install a Nest thermostat or Ring doorbell, get $60 off your annual premium. No-brainer, right?

Here’s what the glossy pitch leaves out. That $5-a-month savings is a surveillance fee. And you’re paying for it with your privacy. The insurance industry calls it “lifestyle underwriting.” 

I call it having an adjuster living in your guest room with a clipboard and a stopwatch.

🔍 The snitches in your house

🛡️ How to muzzle the snitches

  1. Call your agent. Ask exactly what data is being shared for that smart home credit. If it’s anything beyond “device is active,” opt out. Your privacy is worth more than 5 bucks a month.
  2. Encrypt your Ring. Open Ring app > Menu > Control Center > Video Encryption > End-to-End Encryption > Enable. This locks everyone out. Including Amazon.
  3. Go local. Switch to cameras like Eufy (20% off) or Reolink (13% off) that store video on a hard drive in your home. No cloud, no subpoena bait.
  4. Pull your house’s credit report. Go to consumer.risk.lexisnexis.com and request your report. It shows every claim and incident tied to your name for seven years. You might be shocked.

Know someone who jumped on a smart home discount? Forward this. They have no idea what they agreed to.

https://www.komando.com/news/security/your-smart-home-gadgets-are-tattling-to-your-insurance-company-heres-how-to-shut-them-up/